
New Books Network Elias V. Messinas, "Synagogues of Greece: A Study of Synagogues in Macedonia and Thrace" (Bloch Publishing, 2011)
Apr 13, 2026
Elias V. Messinas, architect and historian who has spent decades documenting and restoring Jewish synagogues in Greece. He recounts encounters with ruined sacred spaces and traces Romaniote and Sephardi architectural layers. He describes rediscovering lost surveys, puzzling features like multiple bimahs, and different restoration philosophies. He reflects on memory, community reactions, and the work’s personal impact.
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Finding Synagogues Through Local Memory
- Elias Messinas traced demolished synagogue sites by asking older locals and following their memories to exact locations.
- In Dimotico he found an empty gravel lot covering the original synagogue floor that neighbors used as a parking space, later replaced by a Holocaust monument.
A Lantern Fell Into His Hands
- Messinas recalled touching a fallen synagogue lantern after a roof collapse, which allowed precise measurement and emotional connection.
- In Komotini the lantern fell almost intact and he measured it directly because the roof had already collapsed.
Personal Roots Sparked Professional Mission
- Messinas's family background is both Romaniot (mother) and Sephardi (father), which shaped his interest and personal connection to Greek Jewish heritage.
- His career pivot was triggered by finding a Metropolis article and contacting Samuel Gruber, leading him back to Greece to research synagogues.

